June 2013

Pixies "Head On" (David Wild, dir.)

The Pixies were never a music video band. Makes sense. After all this is a band whose best songs were never the proper singles, who had no interest in looking like a rock band, was happy to arrange a concert set in alphabetical order and hated lip-syncing.

For instance, their other best known video, "Here Comes You Man," had Black Francis and crew employing an open-gaping mouth style instead of lip-syncing, and they look happily uncomfortable (by which I mean: The cringeworthyness is on purpose). Probably not a surprise they're not in their new video for "Bag Boy" — which like all things Pixies is curiously timed, coming just when you think the band is officially, finally over.

The classic Pixies video is their cover of the Jesus & Mary Chain's "Head On," which was born out of the band's insistance that the only way they make a music was if they did it live. No lipsync, no playing along to a track, no nonsense. The band sets up, plays, and gets out.

So the idea was born: Twelve 16mm cameras arranged to capture the band from various distances with different focal points. The resulting footage was then displayed on a 4x3 grid, creating a sort of mix-and-match effect that has the band looking fantastically odd.

Awesome.

Jenny Wilson "Beyond That Wasteland" (Daniel Wirtberg, dir.)

A film by Daniel Wirtberg & Jenny Wilson

Beyond That Wasteland is a poetic depiction of being in a borderland, in the wake of the disaster. A place where one is forced to stay awake in order not to perish. It is a timeless ninja epos about facing an ultimate, life-changing decision – to resist or surrender.

Based on a poem and music by Swedish artist Jenny Wilson, created while undergoing chemotherapy treatments after being diagnosed with breast cancer.

Top 5 Videos By Movie Directors

It's not often a movie director does a music video, which is part of the reason why David Lynch directing Nine Inch Nails "Came Back Haunted" is such big news. And the varying reaction is also part of the reason why it rarely happens.

Audiences tend to have serious expectations from a moonlighting movies director —   in Lynch's case I can guess that people were expecting something like his most popular work, and not something that clearly fits in the lineage of his shorts and artfilms. But it's understandable: You want Wes Anderson to be Wes Anderson if/when he ever does a video. You want The Coen Brothers to do what you love about their work. 

But the problem is it's often not possible. There's not the time, or the money, or even the creative freedom. That's why it's far more likely they do commercials before they do music videos — they might not offer the bigger pallette, freedoms and publicity of a music video, but they at least provide the resources for these big screen directors to execute their big ideas. In fact, both directors mentioned above do commercials, for everything from The Gap to Hyundai, and many others do as well.

Which brings us to this list of movie directors who have made music videos.

Of course there's a catch: We didn't include anyone who started or was primarily known for music videos at some point. That rules out many greats: David Fincher, Michael Bay, Mark Romanek, Joseph Kahn, McG, Spike Jonze and so many more. And these are just the five that Doug Stern and I could come up with on a Summer Friday... there's many more, so feel free to chime in.

Top 5 Videos By Movie Directors  [read on]

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